Soft cells and the geometry of seashells

Author:

Domokos Gábor12ORCID,Goriely Alain3ORCID,Horváth Ákos G24ORCID,Regős Krisztina12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Morphology and Geometric Modeling, Budapest University of Technology and Economics , Budapest, 1111 , Hungary

2. HUN-REN-BME Morphodynamics Research Group, Budapest University of Technology and Economics , Budapest, 1111 , Hungary

3. Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford , Oxford, OX2 6GG , United Kingdom

4. Department of Algebra and Geometry, Budapest University of Technology and Economics , Budapest,1111 , Hungary

Abstract

Abstract A central problem of geometry is the tiling of space with simple structures. The classical solutions, such as triangles, squares, and hexagons in the plane and cubes and other polyhedra in three-dimensional space are built with sharp corners and flat faces. However, many tilings in Nature are characterized by shapes with curved edges, nonflat faces, and few, if any, sharp corners. An important question is then to relate prototypical sharp tilings to softer natural shapes. Here, we solve this problem by introducing a new class of shapes, the soft cells, minimizing the number of sharp corners and filling space as soft tilings. We prove that an infinite class of polyhedral tilings can be smoothly deformed into soft tilings and we construct the soft versions of all Dirichlet–Voronoi cells associated with point lattices in two and three dimensions. Remarkably, these ideal soft shapes, born out of geometry, are found abundantly in nature, from cells to shells.

Funder

NKFIH

Doctoral Excellence Fellowship Programme

ITM

NKFI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference38 articles.

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